Voodoo adds tent camping to festival experience

FILE- This Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009 file photo shows a large sign in front of the New Orleans Museum of Art in City Park welcoming music lovers for the Voodoo Art and Music Experience during Halloween weekend in New Orleans. The three-day festival begins Friday, Oct. 26, 2012, at New Orleans City Park, and this will be the first year tent-camping will be available for concert-goers _ a popular stable at European music festivals. (AP Photo/Cheryl Gerber, file)

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The Voodoo Music + Arts Experience is bringing a European music festival experience to New Orleans with overnight tent camping and more Euro-dance-based acts to its stage.

The lineup for the three-day festival, which starts Friday at New Orleans City Park, includes Skrillex, Justice and Kaskade, electronic DJ-producers who have performed at other U.S. festivals in recent years as U.S. radio continues to welcome dance music to its rotation, following Europe's longtime trend.

This will be the first year tent-camping will be available for concert-goers — a popular stable at European music festivals.

"It's a long-standing tradition that works really well there, so we thought why not bring it here?" said Voodoo producer Stephen Rehage. As one of the first American festivals to offer tent-camping, Rehage said he's starting small, with about 300 tent sites. Restrooms and showers will be provided.

The 14th annual Voodoo will include nearly 100 acts in rock, metal, hip-hop, blues and electronica. Headliners include Neil Young and Crazy Horse, Metallica and Jack White.

Rehage said he has moved the stage for the electronic DJs to a location that can accommodate more festival-goers because last year the fan base was spilling over into other stage areas.

Xavier de Rosnay of the French duo Justice, who performs Saturday, says he doesn't know what makes his music such a draw, and he's not sure he wants to.

"Sometimes not knowing is good because knowing could be a temptation for us to begin making music to please people instead of making music as we do now with complete freedom," de Rosnay said in a phone interview.